| Literature DB >> 26467948 |
Frank O Aylward1,2, Cameron R Currie3,4, Garret Suen5.
Abstract
Fungus-growing ants gain access to nutrients stored in plant biomass through their association with a mutualistic fungus they grow for food. This 50 million-year-old obligate mutualism likely facilitated some of these species becoming dominant Neotropical herbivores that can achieve immense colony sizes. Recent culture-independent investigations have shed light on the conversion of plant biomass into nutrients within ant fungus gardens, revealing that this process involves both the fungal cultivar and a symbiotic community of bacteria including Enterobacter, Klebsiella, and Pantoea species. Moreover, the genome sequences of the leaf-cutter ants Atta cephalotes and Acromyrmex echinatior have provided key insights into how this symbiosis has shaped the evolution of these ants at a genetic level. Here we summarize the findings of recent research on the microbial community dynamics within fungus-growing ant fungus gardens and discuss their implications for this ancient symbiosis.Entities:
Keywords: Leucoagaricus; attine ants; co-evolution; microbial consortia; symbiosis
Year: 2012 PMID: 26467948 PMCID: PMC4553616 DOI: 10.3390/insects3010041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 1(a, b) Leaf-cutter ants forage on large quantities of fresh foliar biomass. (c) They bring this material into their subterranean nests, where it is integrated into symbiotic fungus gardens they cultivate for food. [Photo credits: A; Jarrod J. Scott, B; Christian R. Linder, used under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2, C; Austin D. Lynch.].
Recent research on microbial diversity and plant biomass degradation in attine fungus gardens.
| Ant Genera | Collection Location | Microbes Analyzed | Plant Polymers Analyzed | Methods | Principle Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Brazil |
| Cellulose | Growth assays, enzymatic assays. | Evidence that | [ |
|
| Brazil | Bacteria | Gelatin, cellulose, cellobiose, casein | Directed culturing. | Isolation of plant polymer-degrading bacteria from fungus gardens. | [ |
| Brazil, Texas, Trinidad and Tobago | Microfungi, yeasts, | NA | Culturing, bioassays. | Isolation and characterization of microfungi and yeasts from fungus gardens, especially those of the genera | [ | |
| Argentina |
| Cellulose | Pure culture growth assays, estimation of lignin and cellulose content. | Indication that | [ | |
| Brazil, Panama | Whole fungus garden, ants, larvae | Polysaccharides, heterosides, oligosaccharides | Enzymatic activity assays on workers, larvae, and fungus gardens. | Enzymatic activity profiles for the fungus garden and host ants were largely non-overlapping; xylanase, amylase, laminarinase, cellulase, and lichenanase activities identified in fungus garden samples; evidence for high variability in the enzymatic activities of fungus gardens between different nests and ant species. | [ | |
| Panama |
| Pectin, CMC, ABTS (laccase substrate), protein | Isoelectric focusing, enzymatic assays. | Identification of fungal pectinases, CMCases, proteinases, and laccases concentrated by leaf-cutter ants in their fecal droplets. | [ | |
|
| Brazil |
| Starch, pectin, xylan, cellulose, CMC | Growth and enzymatic assays. | Rapid growth of | [ |
|
| Brazil | Whole fungus garden | All biomass | Estimation of cellulose and lignin content. | Evidence that the lignin:cellulose ratio is higher in fungus garden waste than leaf material. | [ |
|
| Panama |
| Xylan | Activity measurements of a xylanase, AZCL-based colorimetric assays. | Identification and characterization of an | [ |
|
| Brazil | Whole fungus garden,
| Numerous polysaccharides | Enzymatic activity assays on
| Demonstration of broad lignocellulolytic capabilities of | [ |
| Cross phylogeny | Panama | Whole fungus gardens | Numerous polysaccharides | AZCL-based colorimetric assays. | Evidence for an evolutionary transition towards more efficient proteinase and amylase activity in leaf-cutter ant fungus gardens; evidence for broad lignocellulolytic capacity in lower attine fungus gardens. | [ |
|
| Texas, Panama |
| NA | Microsattelite profiling of
| Confirms that a single strain of | [ |
| Panama, Costa Rica, Argentina | NA | Directed culturing, stable isotope analysis, acetylene reduction analysis, phylogenetic comparisons. | Identification of nitrogen-fixing | [ | ||
|
| Panama |
| Pectin | Proteomics, RT-qPCR, enzymatic assays. | Identification of diverse fungal pectinases concentrated in the fecal droplets of the ants; evidence that | [ |
| Panama, Argentina | Primarily Gram-negative bacteria | NA | Lipid profiling using PLFA and FAME. | Evidence that ant fungus gardens and refuse dumps contain distinct microbial communities; evidence that the prokaryotic fraction of fungus gardens is dominated by Gram-negative bacteria. | [ | |
|
| Panama | γ-proteobacteria, primarily
| Cellulose, hemicelluloses | Community metagenomics, 16S surveys, genome sequencing, enzymatic assays, sugar composition analysis. | Survey of bacterial diversity in fungus gardens; Identification of abundant | [ |
|
| Whole fungus garden | Numerous polysaccharides | AZCL-based colorimetric assays | Evidence that enzyme profiles in fungus gardens shift rapidly when integrated foliar biomass changes. | [ | |
|
| Panama | Whole fungus garden | Pectin, xylose | Antibody and CBM-based polysaccharide microarray profiling, AZCL-based colorimetric assays. | Evidence for the degradation of xylan and pectin, but not cellulose, in fungus gardens; Indication that plant material is only partially degraded in these ecosystems. | [ |
|
| Brazil |
| All biomass | Dye and photomicrography of plant biomass. | Evidence for substantial degradation of all non-lignified plant tissues in fungus gardens; indication that | [ |
| Cross phylogeny | Panama |
| Protein | Enzymatic assays, pH and buffering analysis. | Indication that the fungal cultivars of higher attines have evolved proteinases with activity optima at pH ~5, closer to the pH of fungus gardens; characterization of different proteinase classes and buffing capacities in different fungus gardens | [ |
|
| Panama | Bacteria | Cellulose, hemicelluloses | Community metagenomics, 16S surveys, metaproteomics. | Identification of abundant | [ |
Factors contributing to microbial assemblage composition in attine ant fungus gardens.
| Factors limiting diversity | Weeding and grooming of fungus gardens, application of glandular secretions, application of antimicrobials from |
| Factors promoting diversity | Complex, nutrient rich substrate |
| Potential sources of microbial groups | Maternal transmission from parent colony, phyllosphere microbes on foliar biomass, surrounding soil, the ants themselves |